Car bomb explodes outside U.S. consulate in Irbil, Iraq; no Americans reported hurt in Kurdish city

Islamic State militants took responsibility Friday for a car bomb that exploded outside the U.S. consulate in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil.

The State Department said no U.S. personnel were killed in the Friday afternoon blast in the capital of Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region.

Local media reports indicated that at least one civilian was killed in the explosion, which occurred outside the heavily guarded consulate compound in the mostly Christian Ankawa district. The area is popular with foreigners and is home to many cafes, restaurants and hotels.

The Kurdish Rudaw website reported two civilians killed and at least eight injured in the bombing. Other accounts indicated that three people may have been killed in the blast.

Gunfire was heard after the explosion, according to news accounts. The consulate is on a major thoroughfare with a steady flow of traffic.

Photos from the scene showed a thick plume of black smoke rising above the Ankawa neighborhood.

Iraqi forces battled Islamic State fighters for control of Ramadi on Thursday, officials said, attempting to thwart the militant group’s latest bid to overrun government-held areas of Anbar province.

Ramadi, the capital of Sunni Muslim-dominated Anbar province, has been the site of repeated clashes...

Iraqi forces battled Islamic State fighters for control of Ramadi on Thursday, officials said, attempting to thwart the militant group’s latest bid to overrun government-held areas of Anbar province.

Ramadi, the capital of Sunni Muslim-dominated Anbar province, has been the site of repeated clashes...

(Nabih Bulos)

Islamic State took responsibility in a Twitter message, said SITE, a private intelligence website that monitors militant Web traffic. The militants said the consulate was the target.

Irbil has been spared much of the violence that has convulsed Iraq since June, when Islamic State militants swept through a vast swath of northern and central Iraq. The militants advanced to within 25 miles or so of the Kurdish capital before being pushed back by U.S. airstrikes and Kurdish peshmerga ground forces.

In ordering the airstrikes against Islamic State targets last year, President Obama noted the large presence of U.S. citizens in Irbil. Washington is closely allied with the semi-autonomous Kurdish government.

But Obama will be seeking assurances that Abadi will rein in the Shiite...

When Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Abadi sits down in the Oval Office on Tuesday, he is expected to ask President Obama to boost U.S. military assistance to help his beleaguered government push Islamic State militants out of Iraq.

But Obama will be seeking assurances that Abadi will rein in the Shiite...

(Brian Bennett)

Special correspondent Nabih Bulos in Amman, Jordan, contributed to this report.

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